Machine Learning in Non-Stationary Environments: Introduction to Covariate Shift Adaptation
Masashi Sugiyama and Motoaki Kawanabe
Abstract
As the power of computing has grown over the past few decades, the field of machine learning has advanced rapidly in both theory and practice. Machine learning methods are usually based on the assumption that the data generation mechanism does not change over time. Yet real-world applications of machine learning, including image recognition, natural language processing, speech recognition, robot control, and bioinformatics, often violate this common assumption. Dealing with non-stationarity is one of modern machine learning’s greatest challenges. This book focuses on a specific non-stationary ... More
As the power of computing has grown over the past few decades, the field of machine learning has advanced rapidly in both theory and practice. Machine learning methods are usually based on the assumption that the data generation mechanism does not change over time. Yet real-world applications of machine learning, including image recognition, natural language processing, speech recognition, robot control, and bioinformatics, often violate this common assumption. Dealing with non-stationarity is one of modern machine learning’s greatest challenges. This book focuses on a specific non-stationary environment known as covariate shift, in which the distributions of inputs (queries) change but the conditional distribution of outputs (answers) is unchanged, and presents machine learning theory, algorithms, and applications to overcome this variety of non-stationarity. After reviewing the state-of-the-art research in the field, the book discusses topics that include learning under covariate shift, model selection, importance estimation, and active learning. It describes such real-world applications of covariate shift adaption as brain-computer interface, speaker identification, and age prediction from facial images.
Keywords:
computing,
machine learning,
data generation mechanism,
image recognition,
natural language processing,
speech recognition,
robot control,
bioinformatics,
non-stationarity,
covariate shift
Bibliographic Information
Print publication date: 2012 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780262017091 |
Published to MIT Press Scholarship Online: September 2013 |
DOI:10.7551/mitpress/9780262017091.001.0001 |